In accordance with Rules _____________________________ of the Wisconsin Rules of Civil Procedures, Plaintiff requires that you answer the following Interrogatories in writing and under oath.

DEFINITIONS
As used herein below, the following words have the meaning hereafter set forth:

1. “Defendant”, “you”, and “your” refer to the party or parties to whom these Interrogatories are directed and all other persons acting on behalf of such party, including, but not limited to,…show more content…

5. “Produce” and “provide” mean to provide a legible true copy of the original or any document and/or communication pertaining to the Plaintiff’s Interrogatories.

7. “Describe”, used in connection with any act, occurrence, or physical facts, shall include but not to be limited to the following: the identity of every person known to have been involved in or to have witnessed the act or occurrence, the date or dates of any such act or occurrences, and a description of any documents, records, or things documenting or involved in such act, occurrence, or fact.

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Without the inspectors effects he would more or less have no meaning. Like how a car need tyre to work, correspondingly the play needs inspector Goole’s mystic devices for the play to work. However in one word I would describe him as ‘unearthly`, Because he knew how to make people feel frail and weak.
Knowledge and timing:
When the inspector arrives to the Birlings joyous and content atmosphere, He turns it upside down like a smile into a frown. He’s timing was also very good It was daring but…

Sheila is upset that her parents are acting as though nothing has happened. She then wonders aloud whether the Inspector wasn’t actually a police inspector at all. Birling judges that it would make a big difference if the Inspector had been a fake, while Sheila judges that it wouldn’t, because what is really important are the truths revealed by the questioning. Birling recalls that the Inspector did talk like a Socialist.
Sheila and Mr. Birling split in their respective opinions of the moral consequence…

5. “Produce” and “provide” mean to provide a legible true copy of the original or any document and/or communication pertaining to the Plaintiff’s Interrogatories.
6. “Relate to,” “relating to”, “concerning,” “pertain,” and “pertaining to,” mean consisting of, referring to, reflecting or arising out of, evidencing or in any way legally, logically, or factually connected with the matter discussed, directly or indirectly.
7. “Describe”, used in connection with any act, occurrence, or physical…

J.B Priestly
also uses the inspector to create mystery and makes the story
confusing at times. Furthermore, Priestly uses the inspector as a
dramatic and structural device to affect the audience and help move
the play along.
The inspector makes us aware of social divide as well as gender divide
through out the play. At first men have more power over the women.
However, as the play goes on the inspector changes all this, we start
to see that the women begin to speak back to the men. An example…

this in his play `An Inspector Calls'. J B Priestley hoped his play would help create the desired effect of positive unity amongst the public, giving society the chance with hindsight to look back on what had occurred and learn from this e.g. two World Wars, the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour and an atomic bomb and not just carry on life in the same way as before. He wanted to make sure that everything that had been fought for would not have been in vain.
The inspector is described as “not…

social
classes meant a division between them, causing a lack of
responsibility. Priestley emphasises this lack of responsibility
through the role of Birling, and casually uses the role of the
Inspector to progressively mock him throughout the play.
The role of the Inspector can be interpreted in many different lights,
for one he is seen as trying to make the Birling’s aware of the fact
that their actions do not only affect their lives but others as well.
Another way…

have no sense of belonging to a family to make it cosy, nor do they have any sense of community.
At the start of the play the stage lighting is meant to be “pink and intimate” to show the family is having to pretend that it is close and when the Inspector comes, the light becomes harsh and white as if socialism breaks apart the lies of the Capitalist world the Birling family have built for themselves to reveal the truth about what they have really done, the “white light” also suggests an interrogation…

was
directed so that when the Inspector walks onto the stage he brings
truth, which is symbolised with bright lights. The lights seem to open
up the room and interrupt everything that is going on so far to reveal
the real storyline.
"The Inspector entersâ€¦before actually speaking"
The other characters, when they first meet him, think that he is very
rude and arrogant. Mr Birling becomes quite angry with the fact that
the Inspector has just walked in and demanded…

to use about the Inspector. The way he operates is quite casual and spontaneous, but in fact it’s focused and manipulative. The stage directions tell us that he “need not be a big man” but he must create “an impression of massiveness, solidity and purposefulness”. He is in his fifties and dressed in a “plain darkish suit of the period”. He doesn’t seem particularly menacing. However, he has a strange effect on people. His personality doesn’t really fit with his role as an inspector. He can cut into…

He does understand that the
Inspector is not behaving in the normal manner displayed when a member
of the middle class talks to an upper class person. It would be
unusual for a police inspector to stand up to Birling, which would
cause him to think twice about this "Inspector Goole". This air of the
unusual about the Inspector gives him a certain degree of control over
the characters.
The women of the upper classes were "protected against unpleasant and
disturbing…